2013-2020年美国医院社区获得性肺炎的经验性抗生素选择

Hannah Wolford, Brandon Attell, James Baggs, Sujan Reddy, Sarah Kabbani, Melinda Neuhauser, Lauri Hicks
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摘要

背景:社区获得性肺炎(CAP)是住院患者抗生素处方的常见指征。专业协会的临床指南根据临床因素推荐经验性治疗CAP的特定抗生素。对适当性进行人工评估是费时的,而且往往规模较小。我们使用电子健康记录评估了大量因CAP住院的成人的经验性抗生素选择。方法:在本研究中,我们使用pic - ai医疗保健数据库来定义2013年至2020年住院的成人CAP队列。CAP由国际疾病分类(ICD)诊断代码确定。排除病例用于识别无并发症的CAP(图1)。只有在住院前2天内进行胸片或计算机断层扫描(CT)扫描时才对治疗进行评估,否则视为CAP评估不充分。使用行政计费数据来确定住院前2天内收取的抗生素。经验性指南推荐的治疗方法是根据2019年CAP指南和最近的研究确定的。使用国际疾病分类第十版(ICD-10)诊断代码评估接受非推荐治疗的患者当前住院期间的抗生素过敏或入院前一年或入院时耐甲氧西林金黄色葡萄球菌(MRSA)定植或感染情况。结果:从2013年到2020年,我们确定了447万成人CAP住院;32%(143万)纳入本分析(图1)。在CAP评估充分的出院患者(137万)中,59.7%的患者在住院前2天内接受了推荐的抗生素治疗,从2013年的62.6%到2019年的57.5%不等。总体而言,34.8%的研究人群接受了非推荐抗生素,没有抗生素过敏或MRSA定植的记录(2013年:32.5%;2018年:36.7%)(图2)。在我们的研究人群中,大多数患者在住院前2天使用了1种抗生素(92.3%)。在接受推荐治疗的患者中,最常见的抗生素是头孢曲松(74.2%)、阿奇霉素(67.2%)和左氧氟沙星(31.8%)(图3a)。最常见的非推荐抗生素是万古霉素(57.2%接受非推荐治疗的患者)、哌拉西林-他唑巴坦(48.1%)和头孢吡肟(25.7%)(图3b)。从2013年到2020年,在非推荐抗生素治疗的CAP患者中,头孢吡肟费用持续增加,而在仅推荐抗生素治疗的CAP患者中,左氧氟沙星费用持续下降。结论:大约三分之一的无并发症CAP患者接受了非推荐的经验性抗生素治疗,从2013年到2020年,这一比例增加了9%。需要额外的策略来帮助确定优化CAP患者抗生素选择的机会。披露:无
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Empiric antibiotic selection for community-acquired pneumonia in US hospitals, 2013–2020
Background: Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is a common indication for antibiotic prescribing in hospitalized patients. Professional societies’ clinical guidelines recommend specific antibiotics for empiric treatment of CAP based on clinical factors. Manual assessments of appropriateness are time-consuming and are often conducted on a smaller scale. We evaluated empiric antibiotic selection among a large cohort of adults hospitalized with CAP using electronic health records. Methods: In this study, we used the PINC-AI healthcare database to define a cohort of adults hospitalized with CAP from 2013 to 2020. CAP was identified by International Classification of Diseases (ICD) diagnosis codes. Exclusions were applied to identify uncomplicated CAP (Fig. 1). Treatment was only evaluated if a chest radiograph or computerized tomography (CT) scan was charged during the first 2 days of hospitalization, otherwise it was considered an inadequate CAP evaluation. Administrative billing data were used to identify antibiotics charged within the first 2 days of hospitalization. Empiric guideline-recommended treatment was determined based on 2019 CAP guidelines and more recent studies. Patients who received nonrecommended treatment were evaluated for antibiotic allergies in the current hospitalization or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) colonization or infection in the year prior or on admission using International Classification of Disease, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) diagnosis codes. Results: We identified 4.47 million adult hospitalizations with CAP from 2013 to 2020; 32% (1.43 million) were included in this analysis (Fig. 1). Among discharges with adequate CAP evaluation (1.37 million), 59.7% received recommended antibiotics in the first 2 days of hospitalization, ranging from 62.6% in 2013 to 57.5% in 2019. Overall, 34.8% of our study population received a nonrecommended antibiotic without documentation of an antibiotic allergy or MRSA colonization (2013: 32.5%; 2018: 36.7%) (Fig. 2). Most patients in our study population received >1 antibiotic (92.3%) in the first 2 days of hospitalization. The most common antibiotics among patients receiving recommended treatment were ceftriaxone (74.2% of patients receiving recommended treatment), azithromycin (67.2%), and levofloxacin (31.8%) (Fig. 3a). The most common nonrecommended antibiotics were vancomycin (57.2% of patients receiving nonrecommended treatment), piperacillin-tazobactam (48.1%), and cefepime (25.7%) (Fig. 3b). From 2013 to 2020, cefepime charges consistently increased among CAP patients treated with nonrecommended antibiotics, whereas levofloxacin charges consistently decreased among CAP patients treated with only recommended antibiotics. Conclusions: Approximately one-third of patients with uncomplicated CAP received nonrecommended empiric antibiotics, and from 2013 to 2020 that proportion increased by 9%. Additional strategies are needed to help identify opportunities to optimize antibiotic selection among patients with CAP. Disclosures: None
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